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      Eastern European film festivals: streaming through the covid-19 pandemic

      1 , 2 , 3
      Studies in Eastern European Cinema
      Informa UK Limited

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          Impact of Covid-19 on Consumer Behavior: Will the Old Habits Return or Die?

          The COVID-19 pandemic and the lockdown and social distancing mandates have disrupted the consumer habits of buying as well as shopping. Consumers are learning to improvise and learn new habits. For example, consumers cannot go to the store, so the store comes to home. While consumers go back to old habits, it is likely that they will be modified by new regulations and procedures in the way consumers shop and buy products and services. New habits will also emerge by technology advances, changing demographics and innovative ways consumers have learned to cope with blurring the work, leisure, and education boundaries.
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            Is Open Access

            COVID stress syndrome: Concept, structure, and correlates

            Abstract Background Research shows that the COVID Stress Scales have a robust multifactorial structure, representing five correlated facets of COVID‐19‐related distress: (a) Fear of the dangerousness of COVID‐19, which includes fear of coming into contact with fomites potentially contaminated with SARSCoV2, (b) worry about socioeconomic costs of COVID‐19 (e.g., worry about personal finances and disruption in the supply chain), (c) xenophobic fears that foreigners are spreading SARSCoV2, (d) traumatic stress symptoms associated with direct or vicarious traumatic exposure to COVID‐19 (nightmares, intrusive thoughts, or images related to COVID‐19), and (e) COVID‐19‐related compulsive checking and reassurance seeking. These factors cohere to form a COVID stress syndrome, which we sought to further delineate in the present study. Methods A population‐representative sample of 6,854 American and Canadian adults completed a self‐report survey comprising questions about current mental health and COVID‐19‐related experiences, distress, and coping. Results Network analysis revealed that worry about the dangerousness of COVID‐19 is the central feature of the syndrome. Latent class analysis indicated that the syndrome is quasi‐dimensional, comprising five classes differing in syndrome severity. Sixteen percent of participants were in the most severe class and possibly needing mental health services. Syndrome severity was correlated with preexisting psychopathology and with excessive COVID‐19‐related avoidance, panic buying, and coping difficulties during self‐isolation. Conclusion The findings provide new information about the structure and correlates of COVID stress syndrome. Further research is needed to determine whether the syndrome will abate once the pandemic has passed or whether, for some individuals, it becomes a chronic condition.
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              World-Systems Analysis

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Studies in Eastern European Cinema
                Studies in Eastern European Cinema
                Informa UK Limited
                2040-350X
                2040-3518
                January 02 2022
                August 14 2021
                January 02 2022
                : 13
                : 1
                : 38-55
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Arts Management, Prague University of Economics and Business, Prague, Czechia
                [2 ]Department of Film Studies, Charles University, Prague, Czechia
                [3 ]School of Arts and Media, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK
                Article
                10.1080/2040350X.2021.1964218
                22e351b9-4087-4165-ae26-f2b00b3bdbe4
                © 2022
                History

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